Computing systems could make significant contributions to each of these issues by combining networks of sensors and actuators, sometimes carried by robots, with information systems to perform data mining, fusion and management to improve the quality of information available; to provide intelligent assistance to improve decision-making, rapid planning, resource allocation, and incident command response; and for telemedicine. The result would be a great enhancement of the efficiency and effectiveness of the current 9-1-1 emergency response system.
This talk will discuss technical and societal challenges in building such a system, propose metrics for evaluating its success, and speculate about possible spinoff applications that could use much of the same technology. A video simulating such a system used for emergency response to an earthquake will be shown.
Speaker Bio: Joel
S. Birnbaum is chief scientist of Hewlett-Packard Company. In this
newly created position, he reports directly to HP CEO and President,
Carly Fiorina. Birnbaum's role is to continue to help the company
shape its technology strategy and to communicate this strategy to the
marketplace. He is located in Palo Alto, California.
Before becoming HP's chief scientist, Birnbaum was senior vice
president for research and development (R&D) and director of HP
Laboratories -- a role he retired from, at the age of 61, in February
1999. HP Labs, Hewlett-Packard Company's central research and
development facility, has headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., with
additional branches in Bristol, England; Tokyo, Japan; and Haifa,
Israel. He was responsible for the coordination of worldwide
activities in R&D and served as the company's chief technical officer.
Birnbaum joined HP in 1980 after 15 years at IBM Corp.'s Thomas
J. Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., where he had last
served as director of computer sciences. His first assignment at HP
was as the founding director of the Computer Research Center within HP
Labs, which conducted research into new directions in computer
architecture, hardware and software, as well as some novel
applications. One of the technologies developed was the precursor of
HP Precision Architecture, the basis for all HP's RISC computers.
In 1984, Birnbaum was named a HP vice president and director of HP
Labs in the same year. In 1986, Birnbaum was named general manager of
the Information Technology Group. He was responsible for the
development of all core hardware platforms and systems software for
the Precision Architecture product line.
After the first successful shipment of these systems in 1988, he was
named general manager of the new Information Architecture Group, which
developed systems architectures for cooperative-computing
environments. This became the basis for HP's open client server system
products. In 1991, he was elected senior vice president of R&D and
director of HP Laboratories. In this role, as a member of the
Management Staff, he was responsible for coordinating HP's global
research and development, directing central research, and acting as
the technology spokesman for the company.
Birnbaum was born in the Bronx, N.Y. He holds a bachelor's degree in
engineering physics from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., and
master's and doctoral degrees in nuclear physics from Yale University
in New Haven, Conn.
He has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering. He is a
Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Inc.,
a Foreign Member of the Royal Academy of Engineering, a Fellow of the
California Council on Science and Technology, and a member of the
Association of Computing Machinery. He has been granted an honorary
doctorate by the Technion University of Israel. Birnbaum's board
memberships include the Corporation for National Research Initiatives,
the Technion University of Israel, Multimedia Medical Systems, the
Euphrat Museum of Art, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute. He also serves on advisory councils at Carnegie Mellon
University, Yale University, Stanford University, and the University
of California at Berkeley.